A brief backstory:I got my first set of discs in 2005, a DX Dragon, Viper, Aero, and a Pro D Magnet and was terrible. I was never taught how to throw them and never bothered to consult the internet, which resulted in my losing the Dragon and Viper to areas unknown. Fast forward to now, and I have just started to become interested in doing it right this time. I held on to the Aero and Magnet because I knew I would get back to disc golf, just as soon as the Ultimate bug could stop biting. It hasn't stopped, but I've made room in my disc adventures to enjoy disc golf when I can.

Over the summer I bought a Z Stalker and a Champion Roadrunner X-Out by suggestion to round out my restart bag and just got a hearty shipment in of used discs to start organizing a good bag for my local courses.

They're listed by my favorites to least favorites at this time. I will pare down my drivers as soon as I work more on my form and figure out what features I should carry. I'm pretty happy with my mids and putters, but will likely get rid of the Magnet in favor of getting another Aero for straight putts. The Buzzz was a surprising discovery, I really was impressed with its hyzer and anhyzer performance. I hold these all in a Lightning standard golf bag, storing them from left to right.

What are the distances between the Beast/Roadrunner and the faster discs? At your distances a River may be better than the Beast/Roadrunner(huge overlap) or even a Leopard might be even more usable albeit very likely shorter. See even the Beast at that light weight might be more power hungry than your current distance. Roadrunner should be better now but the River might be even better at least more versatile.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

Look, you've got the discs. Now go out and play. If you can handle (at least moderate) headwinds with your Stalker, you don't need anything else right now. In time you'll find out what kind of a disc(s) you're missing. At this point it's crucial to get to know the ones you're throwing.

Liking the amount/molds for my midranges, but could use some expansion in driver and putter categories. I don't feel comfortable with any of my other drivers, ie. Wraith, Roadrunner, Destroyer, Lat. 64 Bolt which makes me think I need to work with lower-speed/non-wide winged drivers. The Beast is the most predictable of my drivers with a flat release. For putters I think I just need to get another Aviar and Magnet. The Aero is there as a back-up.

It is tough to beat the Beast i haven't found anything better but it also depends on your playing style and the courses you play. Elsewhere the Beast may not hyzer and drop down fast enough so a more LSS and HSS disc could be better. Maybe that is the direction you need to explore with drivers and putters seeing you have only straight or understable discs. Rhyno/Pig/D Zone/ESP Zone for putters in ascending order of overstability with the Pig and the D Zone being fairly similar. Driver world is chock full of fading discs and the speed that is the most useful for you with the rest of the bag and the courses and conditions you play in guides the disc selection. Z Predator is a good left hook driver that is slower than the Beast and sorter so it is good for distance control and placement and it straightens out a lot in stiff headwinds so it performs that role admirably. Spirit hooks harder and despite being faster it isn't really longer like the Force is. Force is faster than the Beast so the added cruising speed helps in dealing with headwinds.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

I acquired a Force in a trade. I didn't want to take it out to the courses I used the rest of the discs as there was only one 500ft hole, and a majority are heavily wooded. I will field test it to see if I can work with it. Otherwise I may look into the Z Predator as I had a Z Stalker but couldn't get it to do what I wanted for whatever reason.

The Stalker is straight and the Pred hooks hard and is faster so it skips a lot unlike the Stalker so they are totally different types of discs for very different roles. Good pair because they don't overlap much. Distance is roughly in the same neighborhood so there is some overlap there but it is good to have different flight paths out to the same distance so those together are nice.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

Went to the course yesterday and narrowed my bag down to these discs judging by how often I threw them/results based on experience. Still need a solid headwind driver. Planning on accessing a Wasp to see how it fits against the Obex and alternatively an Ibex to see how it compares to the Buzzz.

So what is your gripe about the Force as a headwind driver? Too overstable still? If so maybe you can find a poppy top Flash or a flat topped Star Starfire or possibly breaking in a Z Pred if it starts out too overstable.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

I decided on the Pure because it felt better and better the more I held it in my hand in comparison to the Aviar. The grip is exceptional as well. Planning an end of the week trip to the course to try the fresh discs out.